I too feel that the full stops sound/look strange, had it only been one sentence it would have been ok, but the continuation sort of ruins it.
One of the first things i learned though when taking a copywrite class was never to end with one word on a new line, it has haunted me ever since :)
One other thing, the industry standard part sounds odd, i would personally actually go for the Microsoft Office part (seeing as it´s not really an industry standard as such, only sort of a de facto standard) with the R and TM ofcourse, in my experience people only expect compatibility troubles from MS and generally assume everyone else plays along nicely.
Well, got to run, no free time here. Very nice poster, keep coding people :P
/Step
Rose Humphrey wrote:
On Dim 26 juin 2005 20:22, Andy Hall a écrit :
Hello,
On 26/6/05 4:28 pm, "Rose Humphrey" aos4@amont-info.com wrote:
Sorry, that's quite wrong. Look at posters done by professionals, look at newspaper headlines, look at a shopping-list for Heanven's sake. Are the full stops everywhere? No.
These are neither headlines nor a shopping list. If you want an examples of full stops in advertising are everywhere. Just look at just about everything Apple have ever put out.
I have. There isn't. Full stops must be used with caution when you're not dealing with a standard text.
Do I tell you guys how to code?
End of correspondence.